Current:Home > reviewsRock band Cage the Elephant emerge from loss and hospitalization with new album ‘Neon Pill’ -EquityExchange
Rock band Cage the Elephant emerge from loss and hospitalization with new album ‘Neon Pill’
View
Date:2025-04-11 21:57:11
NEW YORK (AP) — To say Cage the Elephant’s latest album had a turbulent birth would be an understatement. The band dealt with the deaths of loved ones, the pandemic and their lead singer’s arrest and hospitalization.
“It’s no secret that I had a medical crisis,” Matt Shultz tells The Associated Press from Nashville on the eve of the Friday release of the 12-track “Neon Pill.” “I’m fully recovered. It definitely left a scar, but it’s one that can be walked away from.”
In January 2023, the Kentucky raised singer-songwriter was charged with criminal possession of firearms after police found Shultz’s guns inside his room at the Bowery Hotel in Lower Manhattan.
“Neon Pill” (RCA Records via AP)
Shultz says that in the aftermath he discovered that for the previous three years or so he’d been having a bad reaction to a set of prescribed medications (Shultz didn’t specify which), leading to episodes of psychosis.
“It’s shocking how night and day the difference is from being on whatever medication is causing psychosis and being off of it,” he says. “As I got off the medication, I went back to my normal self. And that was very odd because it was like having your life hijacked by another person.”
That so-called other person had contributed to the five-year recording of “Neon Pill” and it was up to Shultz — who was hospitalized for two months and had about six months of outpatient therapy — to untangle the music.
“I went back to the lyrics, obviously to finish the album, and it was like reading the words of a totally different person and trying to decode what they meant,” he says. “A lot of it was going back and trying to find the sentiment of what I was trying to communicate.”
Shultz avoided jail time by pleading guilty to three weapons charges.
“I’m so blessed it wasn’t worse than it was,” he says. “And blessed that I got the medical attention I needed. I’m incredibly blessed to be surrounded by my family, my wife. Definitely, God got me through it for sure. I would be dead several times over.”
“Neon Pill” sees the band reunited with producer John Hill, who worked on their last 2019’s Grammy-winning “Social Cues,” and offers a kaleidoscope of rock, from the strutting glam of “Ball and Chain” to the piano ballad of “Out Loud” and the airy alt-rock of “Float Into the Sky.” One song, “Rainbow,” is infectiously poppy, as if Cage did a Dead or Alive track.
“It was very much like a culmination of all the Cage records combined,” says Shultz. “John Hill definitely had a greater impact on this album, for sure. Not that he didn’t have an impact on ‘Social Cues,’ but with this one, he definitely was pushing us harder to reach within ourselves and to write the best material that we possibly could.”
Matt Shultz at the All In Music & Arts Festival in Indianapolis in 2022. (Photo by Amy Harris/Invision/AP, File)
The album doesn’t shy away from Shultz’s experiences and the title track drives straight into them, with the lyrics “Double-crossed by a neon pill/Like a loaded gun, my love, I lost control of the wheel.” The song has become the band’s 11th No. 1 on Billboard’s Alternative Airplay chart.
“We definitely felt like that was the title track once everything came to be,” says Shultz, whose bandmates are his guitarist brother, Brad; bassist Daniel Tichenor; drummer Jared Champion; guitarist Nick Bockrath; and keyboardist Matthan Minster.
Two songs connect to Matt and Brad’s father, Brad Shultz Sr., including “Out Loud,” which is based on the time the elder Shultz and his father had a terrible fight and their dad ran away, hitchhiking all the way to Florida. Feeling remorseful after a year, the younger man wrote a song of apology and hitchhiked back to Kentucky to play it for his father.
Matt Shultz says he was moved by the story and “so I wrote a song about the song he wrote.” That song has the lines: “Man, I really messed up now/ Clipped those wings and I came back home/Tried my best just to carry on.”
The album’s last track, “Over Your Shoulder,” mourns his father’s death in 2020. The Shultz brothers inherited milk crates with hundreds of their dad’s songs on old cassette tapes. A new original Cage song emerged, similar to their dad’s style, with the lyrics: “Don’t look back over your shoulder/I’m not saying don’t ask/When it feels like it gets colder/Every season will pass.”
Matt Shultz says the entire album marks a bit of a departure for a band who he admits often in the past wore their influences on their sleeves.
“We would be in the studio and definitely at times trying to imitate and emulate. But with this record, I think, we were just really relaxed into ourselves and reaching to make something that we love.”
___
Mark Kennedy is at http://twitter.com/KennedyTwits
veryGood! (19556)
Related
- Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
- Home and Away Actor Johnny Ruffo Dead at 35
- The Eras Tour returns: See the new surprise songs Taylor Swift played in Argentina
- Sheryl Crow, Mickey Guyton to honor Tanya Tucker, Patti LaBelle on CMT's 'Smashing Glass'
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- RHOBH's Crystal Kung Minkoff Says These Real Housewives Were Rude at BravoCon
- Independent inquiry launched into shipwreck off Greece that left hundreds of migrants feared dead
- Matthew Perry’s Death Certificate Released
- Pregnant Kylie Kelce Shares Hilarious Question Her Daughter Asked Jason Kelce Amid Rising Fame
- Wildlife refuge pond in Hawaii mysteriously turns bright pink. Drought may be to blame
Ranking
- Macy's says employee who allegedly hid $150 million in expenses had no major 'impact'
- Portugal’s president dissolves parliament and calls an early election after prime minister quit
- San Francisco bidding to reverse image of a city in decline as host of APEC trade summit
- British judge says Prince Harry’s lawsuit against Daily Mail publisher can go to trial
- Bodycam footage shows high
- Crew aboard a U.S.-bound plane discovered a missing window pane at 13,000 feet
- Shohei Ohtani helping donate 60,000 baseball gloves to Japanese schools
- Matthew Perry’s Death Certificate Released
Recommendation
Could Bill Belichick, Robert Kraft reunite? Maybe in Pro Football Hall of Fame's 2026 class
Stock market today: Asian shares fall after bond market stress hits Wall Street
Dua Lipa Shows Off Her Red-Hot Hair With an Equally Fiery Ensemble
Matthew Perry’s Death Certificate Released
The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
Former New Mexico State basketball players charged with sexual assault
Judge rules Willow oil project in Alaska's Arctic can proceed
FBI Director Christopher Wray and government's landlord in dustup over new FBI headquarters